The forest grew denser as they traveled, ancient trees towering overhead with trunks so massive it would take a dozen n holding hands to encircle them. The canopy blocked most of the sunlight, creating a perpetual twilight that made distances difficult to judge.
Apollo’s enhanced senses picked up subtle changes in the air, a sweetness that reminded him uncomfortably of the fungal forest, though fainter, mixed with sothing else he couldn’t identify. The gold in his veins maintained a steady, warning pulse, not imdiate danger but constant awareness.
"Water ahead," Renna announced, her hunter’s instincts picking up the sound before the others heard it.
They erged into a small clearing where a stream cut through the forest floor. Unlike the corrupted water they’d encountered yesterday, this one moved naturally, babbling over stones worn smooth by centuries of flow.
Fish darted in the shallows, the first living creatures they’d seen since entering this cursed wood.
"Finally," Nik breathed, dropping to his knees beside the stream. "Normal water. Water that doesn’t glow or pulse or make the ground shake."
Apollo knelt upstream from the others, cupping the clear liquid to his lips. It tasted clean, slightly mineral from its passage through stone, with none of the wrongness that had marked the previous stream. The bow remained calm against his back, offering no warnings.
As they refilled their waterskins and rested in the clearing, Apollo noticed Lyra watching him with that sa careful assessnt he’d seen the night before. When their eyes t, she didn’t look away.
"You’re different," she said simply, her voice pitched too low for the others to hear over the stream’s murmur. "Not just the archery. Sothing else."
Apollo paused in his water gathering, considering his response. "We’re all different after what we’ve been through," he said finally. "Surviving changes people."
"Does it change them into sothing that can fire arrows of light?" Her green eyes never left his face. "Sothing that ancient weapons recognize as their rightful wielder?"
The directness of her question caught him off guard. He’d grown too comfortable, allowed too much of his true nature to show through. "I don’t know what you an," he said, though the words felt hollow even to him.
Lyra was quiet for a long mont, studying his face as if morizing every detail. "I won’t press," she said eventually. "Whatever you are, you’ve kept us alive. But secrets have a way of surfacing when you least expect them."
Before Apollo could respond, Thorin’s voice cut across the clearing. "Movent in the trees. North side."
Everyone froze, hands moving instinctively to weapons. Apollo rose slowly, his fingers finding the bow’s grip as he scanned the indicated direction. At first he saw nothing but shadows and leaves, then caught it, a subtle shifting among the branches, too purposeful to be wind.
"More than one," Renna whispered, her knife already in hand. "They’re circling us."
The bow grew warm against Apollo’s palm as he drew it, an arrow materializing in his other hand though he couldn’t rember reaching for the quiver. The gold in his veins quickened, responding to approaching danger.
A low growl rumbled through the clearing, coming from multiple directions at once. Not the intelligent malice of the creature from the night before, but sothing more primal, hungrier. Apollo caught glimpses of movent, sleek forms sliding between the trees with predatory grace.
"Wolves?" Nik suggested hopefully, though his voice betrayed his doubt.
"No," Apollo said, the bow’s knowledge flowing through him like cold water. "Sothing else. Sothing that’s been hunting in these woods for a very long ti."
The first beast erged from the shadows, and Apollo’s breath caught in his throat. It had once been a wolf, perhaps, but corruption had twisted it into sothing far worse.
Its fur hung in patches from elongated limbs, revealing skin that pulsed with familiar golden veins. Its eyes burned with the sa malevolent light they’d seen in the larger creature, and its mouth opened to reveal rows of teeth that belonged in a shark’s jaw rather than any terrestrial predator.
More appeared, slinking out of the undergrowth on all sides of the clearing. Apollo counted at least six, possibly more still hidden in the shadows. They moved with pack intelligence, positioning themselves to cut off all escape routes.
"Back to back," Cale ordered, his sword already drawn. "Don’t let them isolate anyone."
They ford a rough circle in the center of the clearing, weapons facing outward. Apollo found himself between Thorin and Lyra, the bow singing in his hands as he tracked the movent of the corrupted pack.
The lead wolf, larger than the others, its corruption more advanced—padded forward until it stood at the very edge of the stream. It studied them with those burning eyes, head tilted as if evaluating their threat level.
Then it howled.
The sound was nothing like a natural wolf’s call. It carried harmonics that seed to resonate in Apollo’s bones, a frequency that made the gold in his veins burn with recognition and revulsion.
The other pack mbers answered, their voices joining in a chorus that filled the clearing with unnatural sound.
"They’re calling for reinforcents," Renna said, her face pale but determined. "We need to break out of this circle before—"
The lead wolf launched itself across the stream, its powerful hind legs propelling it through the air with impossible speed. Apollo’s arrow t it halfway, the shaft blazing with blue-gold fire as it struck the creature center mass.
The wolf’s howl cut off abruptly as it crashed into the stream, golden ichor spreading through the clear water.
But its attack had been a signal. The other pack mbers struck simultaneously, converging on their huddled group from all sides.
Apollo drew and fired as fast as his enhanced reflexes allowed, each arrow finding its mark with supernatural precision. But there were too many of them, and they moved with pack coordination that made individual targeting difficult.
Thorin’s axe blazed blue as it t the charge of a massive wolf, the dwarf’s roar matching the beast’s snarl. Lyra danced aside from snapping jaws, her knife opening a line of golden fire across her attacker’s flank. Cale’s sword work was thodical and deadly, each strike aid at vital points with a soldier’s economy of motion.
But Apollo could see they were being overwheld. For every wolf that fell to his arrows, another seed to erge from the forest depths. The pack was larger than he’d initially realized, and they fought with the desperate hunger of creatures that had been denied prey for far too long.
The bow pulsed in his hands, and suddenly Apollo understood. These wolves, this forest, the creature from the night before, they were all connected, all part of sothing larger that his divine senses were only beginning to comprehend.
’A network,’ he realized, drawing and firing in one fluid motion. ’Not individual threats but parts of a single, vast organism.’
The understanding ca with a terrible clarity that made his blood run cold. They weren’t just fighting corrupted animals, they were fighting the forest itself.
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